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The Reunification of Science and Philosophy
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Barnes and Noble
The Reunification of Science and Philosophy
Current price: $20.00
Barnes and Noble
The Reunification of Science and Philosophy
Current price: $20.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: Paperback
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A good vehicle for a whole philosophical adventure turns out to be a Theory of Opposites called Natural Dialectic. 'Dialectic' involves to-fro interaction between opposing poles of either thought or things; 'Natural' means associated with no particular social, religious or cultural structure; and Natural Dialectic's primary aim is, in the words of Albert Einstein, seeking the simplest possible scheme of thought that will bind together the observed facts. Such culture-neutral philosophy is here introduced and related to the equally culture-neutral sciences of psychology, physics, biology and sociology.
So are you interested in a fresh perspective? Do you want to travel? Then read 'The Reunification of Science and Philosophy', an abbreviation of the larger compendium this website airs. And, since information plays a major role in the holistic or dualistic explanation of our world, we can reasonably compare the structure of this guide to a central practice of IT -
top-down
programming. Programs always start with a purpose; from this heart a systems analyst sketches out associated constituents and arranges them in data models, flow charts and so on. A plan is rigorously developed through stages leading, like the codified steps of a computer algorithm, to its specified result. Thus, like a main routine with switches branching to extend its range, this book with footnotes acts as a kind of cosmic
program.
How does it all work? Take a look and see.
So are you interested in a fresh perspective? Do you want to travel? Then read 'The Reunification of Science and Philosophy', an abbreviation of the larger compendium this website airs. And, since information plays a major role in the holistic or dualistic explanation of our world, we can reasonably compare the structure of this guide to a central practice of IT -
top-down
programming. Programs always start with a purpose; from this heart a systems analyst sketches out associated constituents and arranges them in data models, flow charts and so on. A plan is rigorously developed through stages leading, like the codified steps of a computer algorithm, to its specified result. Thus, like a main routine with switches branching to extend its range, this book with footnotes acts as a kind of cosmic
program.
How does it all work? Take a look and see.